OPINION
BRET
STEPHENS
Turkey’s Election Is a Warning About Trump
May 30,
2023
A close-up of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan with two
red banners with white stars and crescents partly obscuring his face.
Bret
Stephens
By Bret
Stephens
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/30/opinion/turkey-election-erdogan-trump.html
“The
totalitarian phenomenon,” the French philosopher Jean-François Revel once
noted, “is not to be understood without making an allowance for the thesis that
some important part of every society consists of people who actively want
tyranny: either to exercise it themselves or — much more mysteriously — to
submit to it.”
It’s an
observation that should help guide our thinking about the re-election this week
of Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Turkey. And it should serve as a warning about other
places — including the Republican Party — where autocratic leaders, seemingly
incompetent in many respects, are returning to power through democratic means.
That’s not
quite the way Erdogan’s close-but-comfortable victory in Sunday’s runoff over
the former civil servant Kemal Kilicdaroglu is being described in many
analyses. The president, they say, has spent 20 years in power tilting every
conceivable scale in his favor.
Erdogan has
used regulatory means and abused the criminal-justice system to effectively
control the news media. He has exercised his presidential power to deliver
subsidies, tax cuts, cheap loans and other handouts to favored constituencies.
He has sought to criminalize an opposition party on specious grounds of links
to terrorist groups. In December, a Turkish court effectively barred Erdogan’s
most serious prospective rival, Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu of Istanbul, from politics
by sentencing him to prison on charges of insulting public officials.
Then, too,
Kilicdaroglu was widely seen as a colorless and inept politician, promising a
return to a status quo ante that many Turks remember, with no fondness, as a
time of regular economic crises and a kind of repressive secularism.
All of this
is true, as far as it goes, and it helps underscore the worldwide phenomenon of
what Fareed Zakaria aptly calls “free and unfair elections.” But it doesn’t go
far enough.
Turkey
under Erdogan is in a dreadful state and has been for a long time. Inflation
last year hit 85 percent and is still running north of 40 percent, thanks to
Erdogan’s insistence on cutting interest rates in the teeth of rising prices.
He has used a series of show trials — some based in fact, others pure fantasy —
to eviscerate civil freedoms. February’s earthquakes, which took an estimated
50,000 lives and injured twice as many, were badly handled by the government
and exposed the corruption of a system that cared more for patronage networks
than for well-built buildings.
Under
normal political expectations, Erdogan should have paid the political price
with a crushing electoral defeat. Not only did he survive, he increased his
vote share in some of the towns worst hit by, and most neglected after, the
earthquakes. “We love him,” explained a resident quoted in The Economist. “For
the call to prayer, for our homes, for our headscarves.”
That last
line is telling, and not just because it gets to the importance of Erdogan’s
Islamism as the secret of his success. It’s a rebuke to James Carville’s
parochially American slogan, “It’s the economy, stupid.” Actually, no: It’s
also God, tradition, values, identity, culture and the resentments that go with
each. Only a denuded secular imagination fails to notice that there are things
people care about more than their paychecks.
There is
also the matter of power. The classically liberal political tradition is based
on the suspicion of power. The illiberal tradition is based on the exaltation
of it. Erdogan, as the tribune of the Turkish Everyman, built himself an
aesthetically grotesque, 1,100-room presidential palace for $615 million. Far
from scandalizing his supporters, it seems to have delighted them. In it, they
see not a sign of extravagance or waste, but the importance of the man and the
movement to which they attach themselves and submit.
All this is
a reminder that political signals are often transmitted at frequencies that
liberal ears have trouble hearing, much less decoding. To wonder how Erdogan could
possibly be re-elected after so thoroughly wrecking his country’s economy and
its institutions is akin to wondering how Vladimir Putin appears to retain
considerable domestic support in the wake of his Ukraine debacle. Maybe what
some critical mass of ordinary Russians want, at least at some subconscious
level, isn’t an easy victory. It’s a unifying ordeal.
Which
brings us to another would-be strongman in his palace in Palm Beach. In
November, I was sure that Donald Trump was, as I wrote, “finally finished.” How
could any but his most slavish followers continue to support him after he had
once again cost Republicans the Senate? Wouldn’t this latest proof of losing be
the last straw for devotees who had been promised “so much winning”?
Silly me.
The Trump movement isn’t built on the prospect of winning. It’s built on a
sense of belonging: of being heard and seen; of being a thorn in the side to
those you sense despise you and whom you despise in turn; of submission for the
sake of representation. All the rest — victory or defeat, prosperity or misery
— is details.
Erdogan
defied expectation because he understood this. He won’t be the last populist
leader to do so.
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Bret
Stephens has been an Opinion columnist with The Times since April 2017. He won
a Pulitzer Prize for commentary at The Wall Street Journal in 2013 and was
previously editor in chief of The Jerusalem Post. Facebook
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